%%I log all my signals on a legal pad in pencil (yeah old school but it keeps me "close to the ground"). Each day is dated (day trader here) and then signals numbered followed by long or short, price, time of day, type of signal (all mine are variations of the same concept), maximum favorable excursion, maximum adverse excursion, win or loss, tick size for W or L. I then compare with actual trades made to see if I missed any or took anything resembling an undefined signal. I've been doing this for a long time and the benefit proves diminishing returns but it was invaluable early and I like doing it...kinda like a fitness routine.
%%Spreed sheet, cut and past from order status window.
What I found more important than a trade journal was having a written trading plan.I've seen many people speak on the importance of a trade journal and how they wish they'd have been more focused on this when they first began trading. I was hoping some out there might share some tips on starting and keeping a good trade journal. Some things I'm curious about:
What I found more important than a trade journal was having a written trading plan.
Then you can journal your trades keeping track of whether you followed your plan and the reasons you didn't.
Trading is all about controlling your emotions. The object of the journal is to figure out how to do that.
If you follow the plan to the letter and don't make a positive return at least you know that it is the plan not the trader that is the problem.
I keep chart screenshots (with notes embedded) in a folder on my desktop. Short and sweet. Can't be bothered "writing a novel".